This is a channel for educational content directed at medical students and residents in general surgery and its associated subspecialties.
While there are a lot of text-based resources for students/residents (textbooks, flashcards, question banks, etc), many aspects of surgery are more easily learned from videos (e.g. details of anatomy, procedural steps/details, mental algorithms for approaching clinical scenarios, etc). This channel attempts to find topics where videos can fill a gap in current educational resources and create useful content. We hope these videos make your journey into clinical surgery a bit smoother.
These videos are for educational purposes only and do not represent medical advice, and should not be used to diagnose or treat any disease.
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Thank you for explaining better than my professors in such a short period of time!
Can you please do a tutorial on Management of Anal Cancer? Thanks for all your videos!
Excellent, Thank You!!
Your videos are incredible. Thank you so much
Thanks a lot
Very happy to find you and your page! Keep it going please.
G hm ye sab Zar bnaatee ha ager chhiye too rabtaa kree
The videos are very good! Thank you I would suggest though that they can be a but more detailed as for residents in surgery and not only for medical students. (This will actually make it double win for medical students) Thanks again
Thanks for the comment! This was one of my earlier videos which is a bit more at the medical student level. Many of my videos since then are higher level and probably more appropriate for residents (or at least progress from basics up through a resident level). Check those out and let me know if there is a specific topic you want covered at a resident level and I will see what I can do!
Great outline, so happy you’re posting again!
It's like you know I just started my colorectal term!
Thank you for your introduction! Very complete and easy to learn.
I loved this. Wonderful work, I look forward to putting these techniques to practice.
the narrator was SO hard to understand with his flat affect.
Great work sir
Absolutely amazing Dr Stahl! I've sent you and email from Australia :)
Thank you, Christopher, this is fantastic content. Your channel is one of the few, if not the only one that breaks down complex/advanced general surgery topics. It is highly niched/advanced content but invaluable to the few general surgery residents out there. Look forward to more and thank you!
Thanks…Helpful as always
Apologies for not continuing through your presentation and seeing that you addressed the error, but frankly seeing it stopped me cold and inspired me to comment right away…
Perhaps you have already amended your slide and your narrative, but you indicate that the T1 A/B stages involve melanomas of < 8 mm in depth, when of course it should have been < 0.8 mm in depth
You are absolutely right- I noticed that after uploading and didn't have the heart to go back and either re-shoot or edit the whole thing. Thankfully I only did it at the one point in the video, and now people can check your comment to avoid confusion! Thanks again- Chris
Very clear and informative. EZ to understand. Thank you.
Very useful, thanks!
Beautifully explained sir
amazing
this was fantastic
Dear doctor, hello, I’m a guy, 24 years old, I’ve been suffering from prolapse of the stomach and intestines for many years. I underwent an abdominal examination, a CT scan with double contrast, which revealed that I had prolapsed stomach. None of the doctors can give an answer why this happened, but one person assures me that it is due to internal hernias. I ask you to give me a little of your precious time to evaluate my research, I will send it to you by mail if you respond...
This is all great, unless you don't have cancer, but have multiple strictures dotted along the length of the Oesophagus... then what ??
Great recommendations!!
Can adenocarcinoma in T1 b layer be removed with an endoscopic option. I had a 8 to 10 millimeter nodule removed from the junction and the margins were not healthy. Endoscopic ultrasound seems to show it doesn’t extend beyond the T1 b layer. Is another endoscopic resection a possible option. The team scheduled me with a thoracic surgeon before the ultrasound and I’m thinking I should actually see the doctor who did the initial resection again. Any input? Not medical advise just in general circumstances.
Really high yield helpful tutorial
How are you doing farmed my sabir masih for chatting names Pakistani and instrument s😮
Love how practical and straightforward this video is. I’ll definitely be utilizing these points on my sub-I next year
12:51 remember when it is to water seal, the suction tubing from the wall has to be removed from the water seal port to allow air to escape.
Best and well explained, true miracle ❤❤❤
These lectures are fantastic! Thank you for posting them.
Thank u so much!!
How much pain will I be in after surgery,mine is large.I also have spine issues
I’ve been plagued with the encontanus fistula located where my rectum was located. After having stage 3 colorectal cancer my guess is the weakness from radiation then along side with having a colostomy the fistula had started. I’ve been leaking bowel for 5 years now sometimes buckets of fluid that’s beyond control. It has made my life very stressful. I also developed a parostomal hernia that’s the size of a woman’s beast size. My hernia has played a part in causing my fistula to become more complicated
Very nicely explained
About to embark on several months of sub-Is and this is tangible and specific. Thanks!
excellent explanation
Thanks
Amazing! Thank you very much for this video :)
These videos are soooooooo good for us junior 1st year Gen Surg trainees. Thank you so much!
Thank you so much for your time and effort , this video was concise and resourceful, it helped classify the data base of information gathered in my lecture in order of importance and clarify some loose ends , I’m so grateful and im going to recommend it to my fellow med students !
Thanks for this. It helped me.
Brilliant explanation! thanks for taking the time to explain this!!
Thank you so much, this video helped me so much!!!!
Years ago I had an axillary dissection. The surgeon used only local anesthetic.
Fantastic explation. Really interesting to learn about the location of the tumor. Mine was around 28 cm away from my teeth so luckily I was fine for surgery. They did a 9 hour Ivor Lewis procedure cutting me open at the back leaving me with a large scar and then 5 small cuts around my chest and abdomen. My surgeon was an absolute magician as I also have a shunt for hydracephalous. He just flippantly said it wasn't a problem he just pushed it out of the way. After around 9 months I am eating pretty much normally - just smaller amounts. I need to avoid fatty, spicy food, or tough meat. I am also on tablets for reflux which guards against reflux as I don't have a sphincter so pretty much reflux has a great time flowing up and down which can be a pain - literally as it feels like heartburn in the throat rather than the chest.
Thank you for sharing your experience! I'm glad you are doing well.
Dr Stahl, what is the exact difference between a high anterior resection, low anterior resection, and ultra-low anterior resection? Are theses arbitrary terms or is there specific criteria?
Tough to say exactly how your institution might refer to these since naming can often vary by where you are at. In my experience, I've never heard the term high anterior resection used. Low anterior is what I discuss in the video, and ultralow seems to refer to the resections where you are so close to the sphincters that you are not getting your typical 5cm distal margin. I wouldn't worry as much about the terminology in a case like this and just knowing the details of the surgery the patient got (or is getting).
@@edu-rrhaphy OK thanks that's reassuring. When I've heard high anterior resection I've always assumed it as a sigmoidectomy + primary anastomosis.